Pope Francis Is Now Warning Against The Refugee Situation, and ISIS Attack

Pope Francis Is Now Warning Against The Refugee Situation, and ISIS Attack

Pope Francis Is Now Warning Against The Refugee Situation, And Says That ISIS Can Use The Refugee Situation To Infiltrate Into Rome And Attack The Vatican
By Ted on September 14, 2015 in Featured, General

By Theodore Shoebat

So it looks like Pope Francis is seeing the realty of the refugees. He stated on a radio show that there is the danger of Islamic terrorist infiltration being done through the refugee situation, and that they can enter Italy and attack Rome. According to the report:

Pope Francis has warned ISIS militants could sneak into Europe under cover of a huge wave of refugees fleeing the conflict in Syria.

The Pope referred to the risk that ISIS jihadists, who have killed Christians and other minorities in the Middle East, could launch attacks in Europe.

In an interview with a Portuguese Catholic broadcaster, he also said the humanitarian crisis could help reawaken the continent’s conscience.

‘It’s true, I also want to recognise that, nowadays, territorial security conditions are not the same as they were in other periods (of mass migration),’ he said.

‘The truth is that just 400 kilometres (250 miles) from Sicily there is an incredibly cruel terrorist group. So there is a danger of infiltration, this is true.’
Security specialists believe the risk that militants could be smuggled into Europe in this way is small.

Francis admitted that Rome could even be a target for an attack.

When asked, he said: ‘Yes, nobody said Rome would be immune to this threat. But you can take precautions…’
Security has been stepped up in the Vatican City and other religious sites across Italy after threats by ISIS militants against Catholic targets in Rome, popular with tourists and pilgrims.

Earlier this month, he appealed to every Catholic parish, religious community and sanctuary in Europe to take in a family of refugees, saying he would set the example by hosting two families in parishes inside the Vatican.

‘These poor people are fleeing war, hunger, but that is the tip of the iceberg. Because underneath that is the cause; and the cause is a bad and unjust socioeconomic system,’ he said.

Asked if the refugee crisis could be a positive occasion for Europe and a re-awakening of the continent’s conscience, the pope said ‘it could be’.

Pope Francis was priorly more confident in exhorting Europe to accept the refugees, but now he is uncertain. It looks like the warning of Laszlo Kiss-Rigo, the major bishop in Hungary, against Europe accepting the refugees, has influenced Francis in his warnings and weariness.

A major bishop for the Catholic Church in Hungary, Laszlo Kiss-Rigo rebuffed Pope Francis’ desire for Europe to absorb the Islamic refugees, saying that the refugee inundation is really an invasion.

According to the report:

Pope Francis, the head of the Roman Catholic Church, received on Monday an extraordinary rebuff from the top Catholic leader in southern Hungary, Bishop Laszlo Kiss-Rigo, who said the pontiff was wrong in saying that Catholics had a moral duty to help the hundreds of thousands of Middle Eastern refugees streaming into Europe.

Re: Pope Francis Is Now Warning Against The Refugee Situation, and ISIS Attack

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Originally Posted by EWSER-X

Pope Francis Is Now Warning Against The Refugee Situation, And Says That ISIS Can Use The Refugee Situation To Infiltrate Into Rome And Attack The Vatican
By Ted on September 14, 2015 in Featured, General

By Theodore Shoebat

So it looks like Pope Francis is seeing the realty of the refugees. He stated on a radio show that there is the danger of Islamic terrorist infiltration being done through the refugee situation, and that they can enter Italy and attack Rome. According to the report:

Pope Francis has warned ISIS militants could sneak into Europe under cover of a huge wave of refugees fleeing the conflict in Syria.

The Pope referred to the risk that ISIS jihadists, who have killed Christians and other minorities in the Middle East, could launch attacks in Europe.

In an interview with a Portuguese Catholic broadcaster, he also said the humanitarian crisis could help reawaken the continent’s conscience.

‘It’s true, I also want to recognise that, nowadays, territorial security conditions are not the same as they were in other periods (of mass migration),’ he said.

‘The truth is that just 400 kilometres (250 miles) from Sicily there is an incredibly cruel terrorist group. So there is a danger of infiltration, this is true.’
Security specialists believe the risk that militants could be smuggled into Europe in this way is small.

Francis admitted that Rome could even be a target for an attack.

When asked, he said: ‘Yes, nobody said Rome would be immune to this threat. But you can take precautions…’
Security has been stepped up in the Vatican City and other religious sites across Italy after threats by ISIS militants against Catholic targets in Rome, popular with tourists and pilgrims.

Earlier this month, he appealed to every Catholic parish, religious community and sanctuary in Europe to take in a family of refugees, saying he would set the example by hosting two families in parishes inside the Vatican.

‘These poor people are fleeing war, hunger, but that is the tip of the iceberg. Because underneath that is the cause; and the cause is a bad and unjust socioeconomic system,’ he said.

Asked if the refugee crisis could be a positive occasion for Europe and a re-awakening of the continent’s conscience, the pope said ‘it could be’.

Pope Francis was priorly more confident in exhorting Europe to accept the refugees, but now he is uncertain. It looks like the warning of Laszlo Kiss-Rigo, the major bishop in Hungary, against Europe accepting the refugees, has influenced Francis in his warnings and weariness.

A major bishop for the Catholic Church in Hungary, Laszlo Kiss-Rigo rebuffed Pope Francis’ desire for Europe to absorb the Islamic refugees, saying that the refugee inundation is really an invasion.

According to the report:

Pope Francis, the head of the Roman Catholic Church, received on Monday an extraordinary rebuff from the top Catholic leader in southern Hungary, Bishop Laszlo Kiss-Rigo, who said the pontiff was wrong in saying that Catholics had a moral duty to help the hundreds of thousands of Middle Eastern refugees streaming into Europe.